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[email protected] 04-09-2007 03:39 AM

Help me restore my lawn!
 
I recently purchased a house in Northern Colorado with a neglected
lawn. This lawn has not received water all summer and currently has a
large variety and volume of weeds. There are a few green spots, but
not many. I've been told that grass is resiliant and can be reovered.

Is this project worth tackling this late in the year or wait til
spring? First freeze is a couple months away.

I plan to pick the weeds first, then dethatch, then areate, then water
heavily. What steps would you add or subtract from this?

What lawn care products are recommended to help this along?

Thanks.


jthread 05-09-2007 02:14 PM

Help me restore my lawn!
 
manure

wrote in message
s.com...
I recently purchased a house in Northern Colorado with a neglected
lawn. This lawn has not received water all summer and currently has a
large variety and volume of weeds. There are a few green spots, but
not many. I've been told that grass is resiliant and can be reovered.

Is this project worth tackling this late in the year or wait til
spring? First freeze is a couple months away.

I plan to pick the weeds first, then dethatch, then areate, then water
heavily. What steps would you add or subtract from this?

What lawn care products are recommended to help this along?

Thanks.




[email protected] 06-09-2007 02:13 PM

Help me restore my lawn!
 
On Sep 5, 9:14 am, "jthread" wrote:
manure

wrote in message

s.com...



I recently purchased a house in Northern Colorado with a neglected
lawn. This lawn has not received water all summer and currently has a
large variety and volume of weeds. There are a few green spots, but
not many. I've been told that grass is resiliant and can be reovered.


Is this project worth tackling this late in the year or wait til
spring? First freeze is a couple months away.


I plan to pick the weeds first, then dethatch, then areate, then water
heavily. What steps would you add or subtract from this?


What lawn care products are recommended to help this along?


Thanks.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -



Impossible to say without knowing what kind of grass you have. It
could be an excellent grass that is dormant from lack of water and
will come back fine. Or it could be there was not any decent grass
there to begin with and what was there is mostly dead.

If you plan on salvaging what's there, I wouldn't dethatch and aerate
now, as it will only stress what's left even more short term. What
makes you think you even need to dethatch? Did you verify there is a
thatch problem? I'd probably just water first, wait a couple weeks,
and then decide. I don't know how big the lawn is, but I wouldn't be
dealing with weeds by picking them. Use a herbicide.

If what was there was crap even when it was growing, then I'd kill it
all with Roundup, then re-seed about 10 days later, after mowing
short, raking all loose debris, aerating. Then use a slice seeder.
Make sure the soil is decent, or else you may want to till in organic
matter first. And check PH.

Google lawn renovation.


jthread 07-09-2007 05:15 AM

Help me restore my lawn!
 

wrote in message
s.com...
I recently purchased a house in Northern Colorado with a neglected
lawn. This lawn has not received water all summer and currently has a
large variety and volume of weeds. There are a few green spots, but
not many. I've been told that grass is resiliant and can be reovered.

Is this project worth tackling this late in the year or wait til
spring? First freeze is a couple months away.

I plan to pick the weeds first, then dethatch, then areate, then water
heavily. What steps would you add or subtract from this?

What lawn care products are recommended to help this along?

Thanks.

my house was pretty sad last fall. i applied ph balanced soil conditioner.
that was all and it came back nicely in the spring. i can't areate due to a
grove of live oaks in the front. for bugs i used a natural oil based
insecticide.

as far as weeds. jeeze. start pullin' some people here (this ng) like
herbacides. if you go that route use orange oil and garden vinager. the city
of austin is finding the active ingeadient in round-up in the city water
supply and advised against it's use here.

the good grass will win out over the weeds if you help.

if you have trees don't areate in the drip line (and don't use herbicides in
a trees drip line). Areation works wonders but an idiot on an areator can
cause a lot of damage. watch for sprinklers. valve hole covers etc.

watering heavely isn't going to do much good this late in the game. I'd
stick to a sinsible shedule Once or twice a week depending on rain. 45 min
a station. Be sure to water in the soil conditioner. All but stop at the
first signs of a freeze. Only if it's dry and warm. I don't water in the
winter and I live in central tx.

I would clean up the weeds. Apply a soil conditioner per instuctions. but
about 17 to 18 40lb bags for an average lawn. Areate if the yard if needs
it. Water in with normal water cycle.

Areation isn't going to stop the weeds it makes it easier for them to grow
too. The areator will impregnate the yard with soil conditioner.

You can put in little fertilizer.1/2 dose (you don't want too much
fertilizer in the fall) Find one made from natural materials and if you have
a lot of rain get fertilizer with something to make it stick around.



Steveo 09-09-2007 01:42 PM

Help me restore my lawn!
 
"jthread" wrote:
as far as weeds. jeeze. start pullin' some people here (this ng) like

herbacides. if you go that route use orange oil and garden vinager.

What a clueless twit.

plonk

Bob F 10-09-2007 03:38 PM

Help me restore my lawn!
 

wrote in message
s.com...
I recently purchased a house in Northern Colorado with a neglected
lawn. This lawn has not received water all summer and currently has a
large variety and volume of weeds. There are a few green spots, but
not many. I've been told that grass is resiliant and can be reovered.

Is this project worth tackling this late in the year or wait til
spring? First freeze is a couple months away.

I plan to pick the weeds first, then dethatch, then areate, then water
heavily. What steps would you add or subtract from this?

What lawn care products are recommended to help this along?


Fall is the most important time to fertilize in many places. It helps build up
the roots for springtime growth.

Bob




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